Dēmos · Classical Athenian Democracy · a Stoa Publication
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Amy C. Smith, edition of January 18 2003
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(statesman/general,
Evidence:
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Athenaeus (Ath.).
Thucydides (Thuc.).
Pausanias (Paus.).
Plutarch (Plut. Alc.).
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Samos (in text as “Samians”).
Ionia, Ionian coast (in text as “Ionian coast”).
Olympia.
Thasos.
Athens.
Pausanias (Paus. 6.3.15) provides the only evidence for a statue of Alcibiades set up during his life: he mentions that a bronze statue of Alcibiades was dedicated by the Samians,
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Pliny (Plin. HN).
Plutarch (Plut. Alc.).
Athenaeus (Ath.).
Alcibiades’ general appearance was well known in antiquity, as he was praised by several writers for his beauty (Pliny HN 36.28; Plut. Alc. 1.3). Specifics regarding his appearance are noted by Plutarch (Plut. Alc. 1.4), that his neck was bent, and Athenaeus (Ath. 12.534C) that he usually wore his hair long.
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Dio Chrysostum (Dio Chrys. Orat.).
Pliny (Pliny HN).
Pliny (Plin. HN).
Plutarch (Plut. Alc.).
Athenaeus (Ath.).
Christodoros (Christodoros Ecph. in Grk. Anth.).
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Rome.
Melissa Phrygia (in text as “Melissa”).
Phrygia.
Constantinople.
Other statues are recorded by Dio Chrysostum (Orat. 37.40), who notes a portrait of Alcibiades sculpted by Polycles, and a another one that was changed into the portrait of Chalkopogon (L. Domitius Ahenobarbus), a Roman. Pliny records a statue of Alcibiades in a chariot, sculpted by Phyromachos (or Pyromachos) (Plin. HN 34.80), and another by Nikeratos (Plin. HN 34.88). Alcibiades was also popular among the Romans. Pliny discusses the placement of statues of Pythagoras and Alcibiades in the corners of the Comitium in Rome when, during a Samnite War, Pythian Apollo commanded that a portrait of the bravest of the Greeks and one of the wisest men, be erected in a conspicuous place (Plin. HN 34.26). Pliny also tells a story of the young Alcibiades, shown as Eros with a thunderbolt, in the Portico of Octavia in Rome (Plin. HN 36.28). As R.R.R. Smith notes (Richter 1984, 83), this story may have been confused with that told by Plutarch and Athenaeus about Alcibiades’ golden shield that depicted Eros armed with a thunderbolt (Plut. Alc. 16.1; Ath. 13.534E). The emperor Hadrian was said to have erected a statue of Alcibiades (in Parian marble) on the Tomb of Alcibiades at Melissa, in Phrygia (Ath. 13.574F), while Christodoros (Ecphr. in Grk. Anth.) mentions a statue of Alcibiades, shown as a counsellor, in the Zeuxippos at Constantinople. None of these portraits may be recognized in the extant portraits, nor in a group of eight portraits formerly thought to have been the Alcibiades type (Richter 1965, 106, figs. 499-50).
Extant portraits:
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Sparta.
A Roman mosaic portrait, labelled ΑΛΚΗΒΕΙΑΔΗΣ, found at Sparta, shows a youthful image of a beardless man with long, wavy, black hair, wearing a himation.
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Aphrodisias.
A marble tondo, found at Aphrodisias in
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